I sing of a voyage, and a voyager, sails furled in the dusk,
yet ready to spread before a favoring wind.
The black goose
sails before, into the fire below the sunset rim of the world. The way leads to
the sunken lands, and to the earth beneath the sea that land-bound men will
never touch.
Watch how the waters turn and swirl,
opening a tunnel between the elements. Let yourself flow through the passage.
You are entering the realm of
Manannan mac Lir, most unknowable of the Old Ones, one who escapes definite and
conventional forms. Your kinsman. You are at home here. You breathe where
others drown. Sea-born, sea-girt, salt blood in your veins, coral sprouts from
your marrow. You surge with the horses of the sea, into a rare kingdom
Away, away come away my love
To fields of coral and pearl
Away, away come to me my love
To she who one was your girl
I heard the siren song, though I had long since turned my
back on the sea and lived in a tamed country, in a gentle valley.
She found me there,
as surely as a kelpie finds a lone fisherman in a curragh on a lonely night
with the whisky in him, or the fire of the stars.
Something out of
memory. But whose?
The memory of the
cell? A current in the blood? Something held in the mirror of dreams without
bodily substance, yet alive in the silvered deep of the glass, in suspension
between the middle world and the worlds that escape form?
Do all such visitations come from
the past, from those beneath the earth or sea? Or do they come from the same
time, but a parallel realm of being? Why not from the future?
Questions, questions, while her
lilting song echoes in my inner ear.
Away, away, come away my love.
~
Put this down. Etch it on stone, mark it for memory:
Note of Origins
These words came streaming through me on a night when I was writing some reflections on how more is available in dreaming than is understood by the daily trivial mind. I wrote these lines:
Dreams are the doorway between the worlds. In modern Western society, we have a diminished understanding of the word “dream”, reflected in the common expression, “it’s only a dream”. Let us push deeper, beneath the surface clutter of day residue and “inferior thinking” and the smorgasbord of broken memories, to what Sri Aurobindo calls “the sleep of experiences".
I paused from writing these notes, because I felt a deep shift in the atmosphere, blowing like the wind off an unseen sea. I felt the power of a deeper source, moving with me and through me as wind and waves. I adjusted my inner senses and let braver words come, both fresh and ancient.
Photo: Bow Fiddle Rock near Portknockie on the north-eastern coast of Scotland. The natural quarttzite arch is thought to resemble the tip of a fiddle bow.
